ay VOL. 1., NO. 1. $2.00 PER ANNUM
COWLEY HAPPENINGS |
Mr. aud ene. Scottie Wells, of
«| Bellevue, were recent guests of Mr. '
and Mrs, Robert Littleton.» a
| Mrs.Carm Ellis and Mrs. Ander.
son, of Calgary, and Mrs, Wm. Coch-
Mr. and Mr. Alex Grant 1 rané are on a week's motor trip to
to Ipthbridge on Saturday ae visit friends at Ellensburg, Washing-
: their son, Donald, ‘who had. been abl” ton,
. 1° carried at its mast-head the familiar name of W. J. ‘guest of Mr, and Mr. hey Selb Mrs, I. F. Burkhart is on a holiday
Bartlett as publisher. The voice and pen of “Bart” Mille River. : visit with friends.at Nelson, BC,
Bia have now been stilled, but it is fitting that the Mr. and Mrs. Hogue: and fami Mrs, Arthur Freeman and her
Bees -}- mantle; authority and: Pe etait of publisher, |}*#ve motored to Cardston, — daughter Helen, of Macleod, returned
Spotee: editor and proprietor should have fallen, as they now |} Will. reside. |home on Tuesday, following a week's
ie 1 have, on one who has been intimately identified with Mr, and Mrs. Porchus, have bought visit with Mr. and Mrs, Harry Carney
Ve the business and a faithful-employee for more than the residence of Adam Martinelky) - and family here.
twenty-two years, And so, with this issue the name || | Wins Chan, who has been studying |: Mrs. Leslie Day and her two small
b Of Tis . Mcleod, familiarly known as “Roddy,” ap- at the University of Toronto; is. home daughters, Carolyn and Margaret, ‘are
| gerear ence! i -pears as that mast: =head, he having acquired the sole |} for the summer. Lily, who was work x F paying a visit at the parental home of.
ownership of the Blairmore Enterprise, building. and . || ing in Kimberley and Joe, from Vane Games Sues Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Wood at Cran-
=» Jebpanbing plant operated therewith. : couver, are also, home. brook.
Archie and ‘Margaret Moiiti Miss Alda Thibert, of Bemwoutont
MARY S. B ARTLETT. ‘spending: the stmmer ‘months with arrived home on Wednesday to spend
their grandparents, Mr, and Mrs. TT. a couple of weeks jere with her par- -
Caletti, of Burmis, y ‘onts, Mr. and. Mrsv Mose Thibert.
-| FIRST ANNUAL RODEO | Medicine. Hat visitors last w ’ Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Colvin and fam-
AT COLEMAN AUG. 3 were Mr. and Mrs, A, Bain, who were) ily, of Port MeNicol, Ontario, have re-
"| guests of their siete and’ son: turned to Alberta-to take a year en-
flaw. forced holiday owing to Mr. Colvin’s _
5 ~ Seen it oe ih Mis and Mis. iS “Atteinson state of health. At present the famiiy
ig visiting rélatives in this district.
Keon Appeal: sexe month ill be: [treet Thm veetion: te the baie
> $2,000,000, it was announced by Mr..and Mrs. ¢ Grant: atten We de Mrs. Albert Cleland entertained the
Air Marshal William A. Bishop, | the reunion of the pecan Ladies Aid of the United ¢hurch ai
VG, DSO, MC,» DFC, LL, Race in Lethbridge the weekend of the 2 their monthly meeting at her home on .
Mrevand: Mrs. J. Halton Thursday afternoon of this week. is
ing a wetks holiday at Cameron. & The harvesting of grain was begun
| Announcement
wv
ht >. A new chapter in the history, of The. er
Enterprise begins with this issue.
For upwards of thirty-six years this paper. has
oS EE ry ESS ERT le Le ee
as - SRT a
:
x
| “Serve the Church that the Church
May Serve You" | ‘tion Army eae relief | “Mrs. Eddie McDade arrived from} i a ar erst ee jin this district’ this: week with. the
; ; ‘ Sd - | “work ‘have made it necessaty to England last’. week, she was met in : “Yeo NATALIE MINUNZIE i Swather and the combine mostly being
: CENTRAL UNITED CHURCB raise the objective over the $1,500,- | Calgary. by her husband, and Mr. and. a used, Want i
1 BLAIRMORE > aS ae es Rcd Air | Mrs. J.MeDade. "||" WINS $15,000 CONSERVATORY ©| RATION BOOK DISTRIBUTION | Mr. and-’Mrs. K. J. ‘Martin and
se stat. t, REV James McKelvey, Minister eran the Saket Sakai dec wosnay The * Hillorest. Ball Park was tne! 8 SCHOLARSHIP salts Nt their two daughters, Wilma and Rits,
‘ » . needed for the rehabilitation and centre of attraction over. the erate bah 4 Lioeal ration boards throvgioat Ai- of Mossleigh, on returning from a cee
Serivces Sunday next expansion of Salvation Army. so- énd, when a series of three exciting Friends are ‘ing pabuinbtig Miss, berta have bezn preparing for the month’s Holiday trip to Seattle, Van-
11.00 a.m:, Senior school. ‘cial service facilities. During the exhibition\. games took place between “Natalie. Minunzie, 17-year-old daugh-' distribution of Ration Bock. No, 6, Ceuver and other BC. points, stopped
2.00 p.m., Junior school, «S| war, The Salvation Army concen- | the,C. N. P. All-Stars and Sceptre, ter.of Mr, and Mrs, Charles Minunzie,;during the we2k of Sept, 9 t> 16. Or- Over here to pay a short visit to the:r
7.30. p.m., Public. Worship, rated Seer ee eee of | Saskatchewan champs, Interest was ‘Blairmore, on her success. in ganizational meetings have been held. sons, Kenneth and Linden Martin, ant.
th ed forces, and assistin
e armed forces nee io |e pe as Ae visiting team: had the re winipacth ; Dypinionwide. $h000:
Abs gs onl S games ov +
| Nearly one-third of. ‘the eaivarton | were “aut: wits al they had’ ‘Satutda: ; : apnea:
~Army’s. total personnel was en- | night to defeat the visitors ‘9-2. The! at Vanecaver this spring; «9 > [bel rat‘on Hounds are . “enlisting -pettoshent residence.
or Pen oe me Sunday afternoon game ended 8-5 for|; Miss Minunzie is a native of Blair- the aid of voluntcer workers for the| ‘Word has been Feceived by cable
Wgelvation Akihe Wrorte or the Sceptre, so excitement was keen - ‘for, more; haying been born here and re~ distribution campaign, as. the same, from New Zealand announcing thre
“yeclamation. of the fallen and for | the third game which was played received her education in the local system which was used. in former, birt, of a daughter, Patricia, to Mi.
care and guidance of those in | Sunday evening. The All-Stars “Were schools, as well as her early musical years cdmpaigns will be used for the and: Mrs? J. C. Murphy. Mrs. Murphy
trouble constitute a national serv- | well ahead for the first four innings education. She is well remember:d as 1946 distribution, ~ |was formerly ‘Aline Rits. She served
|
“Vy — is all local ration: boards according their families. Mr. and) Mrs. K: J-
war ene The erpansias
Meth Pil ati _ oneeagae alee
Service Sunday next:
Evening service 7:30 p.m.
SALVATION ARMY, COLEMAN.
Captain and Mrs. T. Smith,
Officers in- charge. .
x eae ;
Blais gga iy crear but Sceptre worked hard and tied the. a consistant winner at Crows’ Nes:, The great burden of the task of Several years with the CWAC and
erring humanity is worthy of far score during the 6th inning and from’ Pags'musical festivals, many times in distributing approximately 12,000,- when stationed at Vancouver ee ne?
greater financial support than is then on they were well away, winning: classes above her age, A great deat 000 ration books will fall on Canada’s
asked.” the final game 14-9. A good crowd of her success in these early days can Iccal ration boards and the'r volun- the Air Force, being one ‘of the boys
‘Thé Campaign opens Sunday, |.was in attendance at all thiee games. _be—attributed=to-the-interest—of -our-teer—supporters— ‘The-volunteer serv: from that-distant: land, ~~~
Sunday’ aeatieaa
11 a.m,, Holiness meeting. -
2.30 p.m., Directory class. :
$ p.m., Sunday school.
| rece ty unaem id Ds Pe aisle hon ae-aieidane eae si abe SEEM local teacher of music in the schools, j ices of many citizens have in the past} Mrs. Elliot (nee Rose Fortier) ac-
foe Gal use cage cs ol toa: onitulce ThA caivees. the |DEMOCRALWG AGGRESSIVE: WAR Maree Moret, aid -experienes: aiayed an important part ig tas combnes: Hy oe. Sere ee Of
Thursday: 8 p.m., Praige meeting, | funds begins Monday, September gained at these festivals. | successful operation of rationing Richmond, California, and Mrs.
- Funerals, dedications and marriages; 16. It will be held in all centres |“ mors is Claihe? AR cca. int the At the age. of :12,. Miss Minunzie throughout the war years, | George Fortier, of Oakland, -Cali-
except those. where Communnit i j
on application ig er local officers. . yh a ett Siege a tenes: world for nations with different ideas,
provide adequate funds or in the | But is there room for thoce with dif-
BILLCREST UNITED CHUR es four or five cities where campaigns | ferent idéologies?
BELLEVUE UNITED CHURCH; already pave been held, An idea is something you may have
Services at 7.80 p.m. every Sunday. . in mind and do nothing much about.’
iwent to Vanéouver as a pupil of Mr.’ _Loval ration boards will decide dur- fornia, who travelled by motor cay,
John Goss. In 1945‘ she won first ing August on the dates for’the dis arrived on Tuesday to pay a visit to
honors. in the Vancouver musical tribution of the books in their com-' he? brother and sister-in-law, Mr. and
festival open vocal class, and also.won munities. The complete week of Sept. Mrs. Wilfred Fortier here. Mrs. Elliot
the ‘shield donated by the Vancouver 9 to 16 has been set aside as ration ‘has two. sons in the Merchant Marines, i
Women’s Club. The same year sie book distribution week, but each lo- one is stationed in Austfalia and one
COWLEY U 1m CHURCH: Or you: follow it out in your own af-
Services. alternate Sunday morn-| 40 years or more, decorated floats, |. . made her debut with the Vancouver cal ration board will decice:on the in Japan,
ings at 11 d’clock. decorated bicycles, Coleman Pipe |*'"* Ree Dire ann tebe, oe Lollownan? i i ° xs |
he bar Minister. band, - Gaiden content: shistoa’ Symphony Orchestra. days during this week when the books —_—— “Vv”
. WwW. pes , poe Arm a Spa < Todians Ais: dhol anes naweran otk. kn clles She yas broadcast over radio sta- are to be d'stributed in their terri-| TAXED EVEN IN }
cowgirls and cowbo te BI SNS TL ee a a ticn CBR, Nancouver;. has held reci- tories... ssinienstenenieeeenieiert ELLEN Meee A NRO NALS
Perera ie BELLEVUE baPrist cauc The ast saved: Sa phase withi' you “with such ton that ‘2/8 in Vancouver and Victoria, ana’ Citizens wl che: HSA ‘thcondlk the SO ee ; é
ator: Rev.’ Fred Bennett at eat en rambler see you want {o give it to all the rest of *Peested in the Theatre Under the” medium of the press of the distribu-| Rev. E. G, Hansell (5. C. Macleod)
sr ' . pa. e up at the east end o: i
a8 ee tom se thas tts wrotidc anit yon form farveashing Stars in Stanley Park. ; tion dates in their own local‘ty. Cit-| sought ae prove to the comnions- that
ath SE ership, 11 a.m “will be placed in their- positions. plans to do so. | It is only last August that Miss izens should Drrange to get their new| the individual is taxed at every turn
Minunzie delighted a Pass audinc2 in. books during their local distribution he makes; when: his child buys a v
The ‘judging will be done immed-
recital in Columbus: Ball here, accom- in order to co- -operate with the volun-| chocolate bar, when he himself uses
By their. very nature, Rasvotoi;
Evening” service 7.30 p.m. -
opposing: ideologies must grapple with
‘jately and the prizes awarded be-: .
} Midweek meeting: : Ke foré the parade starts, vach, cther in a global “battle royal” panied by her teacher John Goss, with tose workers in their community. electricity, if he has a car, when h2
/. . Wednesday 7.80 p.m. The parade will proceed. along Fearl Kerr, of -Vancouver, as accom- wyn dies—and even in church. is
A cordial welcome awaits you. . _ the fall length: of main. street, until, by gr ater power of ye-svas-on nist, and Den ld Grah 3 f Coll ‘ ney eee : . . ne
vik: ‘around the bluff to West Coleman, |9F achievement, one wins the other, or thick ay mee = CLIMATE AND HEALTH Speaking during study of bydget - fre
‘ ———_ "1 -along First’ |.to Salus’ Gen- subhighten by a greater fons of arms. man, assisting. Pietcw tad Cie resolutions, Mr. Hansell,.a minister of - oe
‘intial SBT ASS, A. eral Store, Prat to Second If democtacy tw just’ an ides: it will Miss. Minunzie leaves for Toronto Changeable climates’ are actuaily|the Church of Christ, was unfolding : a :
APPEAL OBJECTIVE ch ty tek, pad 208, Ut fall Lofore the pass‘on. and the plan of next month to start the two-year the best for production of physical and his arguement when Veterans Minis- ees
3 ‘ ‘ghoek where the parade will dis- | Tobust ideology. Ever a bad pian +s nae course covered by this schol-' mental energy, say health authorities, |ter Mackenzie interjected: hs Sane
~—----“Every indication points to a rec- | jorge, stronger than none. But if de-v.ocrat:c A spokesman for the department of| “Taxed in the pulp't?” Eo,
i eon breaking pereds to. oven Cole |. Tab vantage’ apot will be on the |idsale really burn’ within us, and we ‘+ 18 Singular that two Alberta girls national. health and welfare states:| Mr. Hansvll: “If the minister of rs
- man’s first annual , Crow View | two blocks>on Main ‘street, which |have an adequate plan, democracy it- wer honored: in connection with the “anyone who. can face all kinds of| veterans affairs will come to my rar
“ Rodeo, Business houes, ‘coal com- will k th Conserv. bil sholarships. | ”
be kept clear. of cars. self. beonwes ideo! Ard it atory.. jubilee scholarships. wea'her wth exhileration is mdre|church....
: - panies, organizations, and @itizens | —-Rusidents and businessmen along: <i Rag Migs Donna Fi ¢ Edmont le; “ ”
"s+ have promised to have @ float, de- | the parade route are asked to fly. sentimental notense to suppose that azer, of Edmonton, was i:kely to face up to the storms of| Mr. Mackenzie; “I chall Le glad to.
_ *- gorated car or bicyclé in the par- flags and decorate thei their premises. it can passively wxist side 7 side with suceeey in pene: pander living than the person who is} ‘Mr. Hansell: “.:..1 shall tell him
oe, nationality eats “winners in ‘the: various classes in Christian democratig Aeoology or lose will want to adopt it. That ‘s the one} minds, are made to be adaptable, and | ‘rom the highlands he is going to put
- pleturesque es, all ‘combin- © > 4A parades.” {', jit. ; NG 2 ser in “which democracy can wage should be capable. of a bracing| >me-hing on the sats ‘tion plates
“ing to make it a beng up parade, |" a ae iienatiiide however, fore. are two “aggressi\e war.” ‘The’ oaly alterna-| strugsle. with ¢he Winds of weather) © = >——~y Rock;
Kg ‘Leading the way will be the flags _ Mrs. E. ElKot, of Kimberley, BS, is ways to fight. We may fight w'th arms tive. of thoce who: othervi:e woul: @% well as: the buffetings of circum-| | Mi, and Mrs W. A. Chappell, ac- Catia:
a al “of all Allied: Ne 3 carried by. j Visiting Mz,” Mrs. J. -Wolgten- though, of ite_nature, democracy. can, just depleie the passing of democracy stance.” _| ompra’ed by Me. and Mrs. Albert j rae
en _ coy ; Sey cn jonly do this - in» eefense © ‘aga'nst or who “in s efence,? would plungo! Pe ee a aes “hepg:ll, a8 motoring to Vancouver ~ inte
ae: eS, i seevcasion OF we can Saratguad “the ‘inta atomic wer. ye We are-all the same underneath but |where they will be guests of Mr, and,
ae | eae! a some hep themselves further under- | Mrs. Clifford Chappell. They leave on ASE
‘5 SUBSCRIBE TODAY! {neath than others _|Senday morning, — . we 4
and commander-in-chief of Sarawak.
Household taps, trays, and spoons
ber this year. :
Sir Charles Arden Clarke, resident
commissioner. of Basutoland, South
Africa, has ‘been appointed~ governor
are being made ‘at Britain's famous
Woolwich arsenal, where, less. than
a year ago, tanks and guns were
top priority.
*. Plans are being made for a re-
union in Britain in 1948 of the 230,-
000 members of the U.S. Eighth Air
Force who served in the country dur-
ing the war. ‘
British commonwealth countries
still hold a .total of 399,161 German
prisoners of war, War Secretary
Lawson said fn a written reply to a
parliamentary question.
Cost of “conveyance of Their
Majesties (King George VI and
Queen Elizabeth) on the Royal visit
to Canada” in 1939 was £27,262
$109,048), it was disclosed.
AIRCRAFT
Weather Forecasts —
Selence Of Predicting. Weather Has
RESOUES SURPLUS PEAS FOR CANNING—To save mirplus peas in the ‘Trenton district of
Ontario, this four-motored American Airlines DO4, the “St.-Joseph”, was used’to fly the legumes to Windsor,
where the Hssex county canneries were able to process them. Podded peas are packed !n big cans for shipment,
The Next War
ny
The work of transporting 106,000
men of the Polish 2nd corps to Bri-
tain should be completed by the end
of the year, it was learned in
authoritative quarters. ‘The move-
ment started in July,
The Agricultural Institute of Can-
ada will award 20 scholarships of
$800 ¢ach for post-graduate training
at Canadian universities of recog-
nized standing, C. G. O’Brien, insti-
tute ..necketary, “Announced, But the U.S. Weather Bureau—to-
Sixteen prize stud rams were flown| gether with co-operating Army and
700 miles from Adelaide, Western| Navy meteorologists — no longer
Australia, to Sydney for'the annual|monopolizes the weather-forecasting
Pyrmont sheep sales, The flight took| field. A great many private meteor-
Made Rapid Advances
During the war re science of prec
dicting the weathér advanced tre-
mendously. Today this newly-ac-
quired technique is paying rich: dtvi-
dends, - © Ses
In the United States alone it is
estitnated that benefits amounting to
$3,000,000,000 a. year have resulted
from scientific broadcasts, warnings
and reports.
A Vivid Picture Of What May
Happen If It Ever Comes
Alone among the great powers,
the United States concerns itself
with forecasts of and preparations
for the “next war’, Its press, to
the astonishment of Europe, teems
with articles seeking to assess the
nature and scope of that war and
é rie Fay best. to’ devise defences against
Since in a few years knowledge of
; the manufacture of the atomic bomb
PASTEURIZATION CAMPAIGN _ | will have spread to many countries, |
_ GIVEN NATIONWIDE IMPETUS| Professional military opinion in the
Members of the General Council of United States sees future battles
"presents
TOPICS.
age
VITAL
INTEREST
LEAGUE
CANADA.
four hours and the. rams, valued at
__$30,000? suffered no ill effects,
Ammortal Music
Precious Manuscripts Of Composers
Found In Germany
Precious music manuscripts of
Bach, Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Mo-
zart and Brahms, which belong to the
Berlin State library, have been found
in various parts of Germany by the
Allied occupation authorities, the Bri-
.tish news service in Germany re-
ported. .
Most’ of the manuscripts, including”
those of Bach's Christmas Oratoria,
- Beethoven’s Fourth Symphony and
string quartets, and Brahm’s Violin
Concerto, were found at - Schloss
Banz, Franconia.
The
Matthew \Passion , and : Bethoven's
Missa Solemnis and Egmont Over-
ture were discovered at Beuron Mon-
astery. The first and second acts of
Mozart's opera “Figaro” were found
at Magdeburg and the third and
fourth at Gruessau~ Monastery in
Silesia. ;
Among the other’ manuscripts
which are safe are those of Bee-
thoven's seventh and ninth sym-
phonies and Mendelssohn’s. music for
“A Mid-Summer Night’s Dream”,
Work Was Grim
Dutch-Canadian Girls Saw War
Service In East Indies
Back in Canada after war service |
with the N€therlgnds armed forces
in the East Indies, nine Dutch-
dian girls told newspapermen some-
thing of their experiences recently in
manuscripts of Bach's st.| Weather
ologists have entered the business, 80
many that it has now been suggested
that the time has come for weather
men to establish for themselves uni-
form standards of professional. com-
pétence, as doctors and lawyers have
done. . :
How a private meteorologist could
expect to make a living might puzzle
one on first thought. The answer is, |
in industry. A-.large New York
bakery, for example, regulates its
baking and deliveries on the basis of
weather forecasts, because the pub-
lic’s buying habits change with the
weather.
The moving picture industry has
its own weather men to forecast
light intensity and other weather
factors that influence photography.
Commercial airlines have their own
meteorologists to make. specialized
forecasts for various flight,
routes. | Candy-bar manufacturers,
particularly those using chocolate,
need to know hours ahead of time
what the: humidity will be. And cot-
ton mills are among the latest in-
weather influences the operation of
looms. y ,
In the United States the Weather
Bureau *has welcomed newcomers to
its field. Qualified private: meteor-
ologists are even permitted to cut
in on the bureau's teletype network,
So far as is known no . private
meteorologist has set up shop yet in
Canada. Canadians are entitled to
specialized weather reports from the
government stations if they want
them, and in cities like. Montreal
certain industries take advantage of
the ‘privilege. But equipment for a
Cana- | meteorological station is costly and a
large -staff is needed. Canada’s
cities are relatively small and it is
an interview at the offices of the! qountful if the private meteorologist
Dutch Information Service in Mont-
real,
Tall, blonde girls, for the most.part,
they all enlisted in the Dutch armed
will make his appearance in this
country. for at least some time.—
Ottawa Citizen.
dustries to recognize the value of
advanos anther information; tuberculosis, . undulant. fever,
‘forces from Canada and served as \
nurses, stenographers, clerks and Idea Caught On
drivers in@Australia, Batavia, Java,
Indo-China and other parts of the ex- | Englishman First Introduced Iced Tea
plosive territory that has today taken At St. Louis Exposition
the place of the once peaceful and| The story of the origin of iced tea
prosperous Dutch Empire, ~ has run many a story-telling gamut
Four of the girls are Canadian|but the truth of the matter is—it
_ eitizens and five still retain their|was started in Norh America back
Dutch nationality although living in|/in 1903 at the time of the famous
‘Cahada. They arrived in New York|St. Louis Exposition, An English
from Australia and were going to|tea commissioner from Calcutta set
their hémes in various parts of the|up an elaborate exhibit, at the fair
Dominion. Two of the girls Suzanna | to promote the sale of Ifdia and Cey-
and Christine Prins, live in Mont-|lon black tea. He even built an ex-
real. pensive pavillion and tea bar in
Some of the: girls worked in prison | authentic Moslem style. But the
camps soon after the Japanese sur-| commissioner had no way of know-
render and had grim stories of the|ing that Missouri was having its
“starved skeletons of men and wo-|.hottest summer on record, He saw
meén”—whom they helped nurse back|his investment expiring with the
to™health and sanity. All_of them/heat as fair-goers clustered about
had seen “a reasonable amount of|soft drink stands trying to quench
shot and shell” both in the last-min-|their thirst. His only alternative
ute fighting with the Japs and in the | was to try an unheard of experiment
trouble. between the Dutch and Bri-|—serving tea cold. When he sat the
tish and the extreme nationalists | iced tea out on the tea bar a few
among the Efdo-Chinese. . curious bystanders sampled it... They
“It was pretty grim at times,” said | liked it and as word got around, cus-
pretty, blonde Suzanna Prins, “but | tomers came in larger numbers and
all of us should be glad to do it over| by the time the St. Louis Exposition
again.” was over, iced tea was well launched
jas a popular summer ‘thirst quencher,
OLDEST LOCOMOTIVE :
LONDON.—‘Jane”, oldest British NEW HOUSE MATERIAL
locomotive in service when it was| A new material made from wood
retired at the end of 1945, was|shavings and scrapings is being used] -
bought by the Great Western Rail-
way to save it from ‘being-braken-up.
It was built in 1857 and used by the
Wantage Tramway Company.
by a Munich firm in the construction
of-small-one-family houses, the Bri-
tish news service in Germany re-
|ported. The material, covered with
thin coatings of cement, is made into
terete ceo as
Mixing penicillin with ice cream | Plates two inches thick. noe
makes possible its administration by
mouth instead of through the usual
hypodermic injection.
a
The lense of the eye continues to|:
2683 | grow in size throughout life.
ot
the Health League of .Canada at a
recent meeting in Toronto gave im-
petus to the League’s milk pasteuriz-
ation campaign by passing ee resolu-
tion calling on governments of all
provinces to enact compulsory pas-
teurization laws. Ontario is the only
province at present with such leg-
islation. < i
The League Council consists of
representatives of 51 national organ-
izations—medical, professional, com-
mercial and volunteer.
After hearing Dr. F. F. Tisdall of
the University of Toronto state that
milk is the world’s finest food but at
the same time it could be a destruc-
tive agent if it was used in its raw
or unpasteurized form, the meeting
also asked through resolution that
all national organizations pass simi-
lar resolutions and forward them to
their’ provincial premiers through
their provincial and local units, ~
Both Dr.-‘Tisdall. and Dr. As)
Berty, Director of Sanitary Engineer-
ing, Ontario Department of Health,
emphasized. that the only way to
prevent milk-borne diseases, such as
typhoid. -and— paratyphoid,
others, was to pasteurize,
Dr. Tisdall said research at the
Toronto Hospital for Sick Children
proved that pasteurization does not
damage mijk’s nutritive value. . For
instance, it was found that the pro-
cess made milk’s protein content more
digestible, the minerals were not
harmed, vitamin A remained un-
changed, while any change in thiamin
content was not noticeable. As for
vitamin’ C, it didn’t matter what pas-)
teurization did to it hecause milk,
particularly if it was left standing
for some time, did not -contain an
amount to be of value. ‘
Dr. Berry said tHat since Ontario
introduced compulsory pasteurizetion
in 1938 the province’s typhoid case
and death rates now ar- one-quarter
what they were before the law went
into effect. Infant mortality also had
taken a drop. Pall
The meeting went. on record as con-
gratulating Vancouver, B.C., Hum-
boldt, Sask., and Campbellton, N.B.,
on the recent passing of compulsory
pasteurization by-laws in those muni-
cipalities.
_Alaska Highway
Forecast Heavy Vourlst Traffic For
; Next Year
WASHINGTON.—"Increasing tour-
ist travel” over the Alaska Highway
in 1947 is forecast by the Depart-
ment of the Interior.
A teview of road construction in
Alaska notes that there is already
some traffic on the 1,600-mile war-
built highway which starts in Al
berta and snakes through the north-
land of British Columbia and the
Yukon into Alaska, but the road is
not yet open to tourist travel in gen-
eral “because of the lack of facill- |.
ties such as filling stations, repair
shops and eating and sleeping ac-
commodation.” .
among
Te
REG'LAR FELLERS—Quiet Please!
waged mainly with long-range mis-
siles.
hurtling across the
passing over Canada in baleful flocks
to lay United States cities in ruins.
Consequently, the experts demand a
system of defence that will include
deterrant to’ attack.”
pose the construction of a chain of
rocket-firing bases throughout the
ada’s Far North, is the first essential.
either in natural or artificial caverns,
far enough underground to be out of
live there like troglodytes supplied
distant enemy tefritory. Buried even
deeper will be a central defence
headquarters controlling the whole
operational .system.
tion, there will be radar warnings ‘on
an elaborate scale so that no time
will come
Flights of chs
olar regions,
“the power of retaliation as the best
For such pur-
continent and presumably in ‘Can-
These bases must be constructed
the reach of the lethal rays of the
atomic bomb. Thousands of men will] .
Espionage Work
United States Is Urged Te,
% 3 Little Ferreting
NEW YORK. — The Daily News,
basing its observations on the Royal
Commission report on espionage at
tawa, editorially urged the United
tates. to.“pull ourselves together
and doa little counter-spying.” |
The newspaper has urged for some
lish a large peace time. espionage
organization. ot
“The well-eatablished Russian net-
work in Canada had and has branches
in this country, Ottawa warns us,”
said the News, “and this country has
‘a lot more things to be ferret out
than has Canada, Also we have more
humerous, willing contacts for the
spies to work on, in, the. widespread
Communist organizations and their
various groups. .. . foc
“We have caught only one suspect
so far, Lieut. Nicolai Redin, who is
accused of trying to get away with
the plans for a minor naval vessel. . .
“What we need to meet the Rus-
sian competition is Two Spies for
One.”
ISSUE NEW COUPONS
A new series of sugar coupons for
temporary ration cards has been
issued by the ration administration,
the Prices Board said. The new
coupons are green and have a buf-
falo design instead of a beaver, Both
buffalo and beaver coupons will now
‘be recognized as valid ration docu-
ments for temporary ration card
holders.
Eight million tons: of food were
grown in victory gardens as a result
Do A
months that the government..estab-
The Medicine: Cabinet
Can Be Real Menace If Old Remedies
Are Kept :
Possibly the majority of homes
possess a medicine cabinet which is
mainly used in emergencies,” Usually
it contains’ old medicines and is a
sort of shrine of comfort as a chest
of cures for all manner of ailments
and accidents. us Many & hose 8
hold cabinet contains dangerous bot-
tles and condiments, a menace prob-
ably. from their age. ‘The
customary
kind of “first-aid for simple ailments
may become a menace to the house-
hold. For bottles have corks which
deteriorate from corrosion. The
medicine may smell the same aa
when it was ‘put up, but air ‘haa
changed the ‘substance within unti)
it might be poisonous. Indeed, there
sometimes ,is tragedy in a medicine
cupboard not cleaned out and refurn-
ished regularly, Evaporation can
make a tonic into strychnine. It is
good counsel, anyway, to get rid of
old’ medicine at intervals and to re-
stock the chest. Also the contents of
bottles should. be washed down the
drains rather than be put into trash
barrels.—Brandon Sun..,
MANUSCRIPTS FOUND
Precious music manuscripts of
Bach, Beethoven, Mendelssohn, Moz- °
art and Brahms, which belonged to
the Berlin state library, have been
found in various’ parts of Germany
by the’ allied occupation: authorities,
the British news service in Germany
reported. ‘ a
_ The Gulf Stream may. vary from
year to year in distance from ‘the
eastern coast of the United States
of daily newspaper campaigns in| as much as 100 miles, as well as in
Canada and the United States.
| velocity and width.
THIS CURIOUS WORLD —
wad Nin By: William , Pe
Ferguson
with food and piles of atomic rockets
to be fired in thousands at. the far-
Then, in addi-
may be lost in preparing a crippling
counter-attack." This will take the
form of an invasion of enemy terri-
tory by airborne armies; and- after
that presumably each side will atom |,
‘bomb the other until the fate of the
famous Kilkenny cats overtakes both.
Incidental to this nightmare pic-
ture of a world gone insane, is the
removal of all armament plants. to
mammoth caves, the accumulation
beneath the earth of vast magazines
of bombs and stores, and the dis-
persal of the populations of all great
cities, : ate
_How- civil_-government-will function
in this confusion -of a press-button
atomic war, the imagination refuses
to indicate. Probably there will be
no civil government—only a military
dictatorship: And no doubt before
the war ends there will be no popu-
lation ‘either—Ottawa Citizen.
* ee
A Boon ‘To Television
New Vacuum Tube Carries 10,000
Conversations At One Time’
A basically new type vacuum tube
that provides an_ electronic super-
highway ‘for communications has
been announced by the Bell . Tele-
phone laboratories, New York.
The device is important in facili-
cross-country television,-
will ‘be used in systems of long-dis-
tance short wave telephone.. More
than 10,000 conversations, one hun-
dred million words of telegraph a
minute, or several dozen television |.
shows can be handled at one time—
_| should traffic ever become that great.
TO BUILD A TELESCOPE
TORONTO.—A barrel, a piece of
thick plate glass -and- some--emery
powder will fill in the late summer
spare time of Peter Harris, 13-year-
o}d president of suburban Leaside’s
Astronomy Club. Peter wants a tele-
scope. He could spend several hun-
dreds of Gollars for a reflector, or
make it himself. He is going to make
a 32-inch reflector, ee”
_and}—
a ale
GOPR. 1943 ie...
TM. wee PAT. OFF.
SOMBER
. ER,’
CRUISING AT 250 Mi
PER HOUR, CONSU
MORE THAN
THREE GALLONS OF
GASOLINE.
| > BEVERY MINUTE.
MRS. PIP'S DI
4
uch a hot day...
Don’t YOU-have next winter's fuel supply 7!!!” ~~
cages were
" eeeeumeamiiernente : eteetierncnteanien mrebies preterm came eens meneiones |
awake long that night as an idea
formed,
At the office the next morning
he stopped in the middle of prepara-|'
tions for a month's business trip
through the west to-phone Ted to
lunch with him. It was going to
take some careful plann to get
around Amelia, but she has born
in Missouri and. perhaps the 614}
‘\ “show “me” adage would work, ‘
Things went along fairly smoothly
for three weeks. New towns atid new
faces’ always’ appealed to Amelia. |-
Then, on the day before ‘they were
to start’ their ‘return trip, George
came back to the hotel room to find
her feverishly packing. a
“We're leaving. in an. hour,” she
‘announced. “I got plane reservations |,
by telling them that Judy. was in a
seyious situation.”
‘Judy! What's happened?”
... She’... Oh, read the letter.
there on the dresser.” |
‘ George smothered a grin. “I don’t
‘Bee anything’ here to get excited |
about. It just says they've bought |
a ranch.” , |
“Not only a ranch, but a cattle -
ranch,” she almost shrieked.”
“Well, why not? That's what Tea] Newsprint Production
studied ‘for at. ‘college.’ Amelia ‘
ignored him, ‘Imagine taking poor; Shows Increase’ During The First
Judy out on a place like that... Six Months Of The Year
twenty miles from the nearest town} Newsprint production in Canada
.. and they've already moved. That/ during the first six’ months of this
letter’s over a week Old... . Oh, my| year totalled 2,002,985 tons, marking”
poor lamb! .. . all alone in a deserted | an increase of 29.7 per cent. over the |
ranch house . . . I've got to get back} 1,544,513 ‘tons for the same period in
there before she kills herself . . .”|1945, and shipments were 1,960,184
She ‘snapped another bag shut. tons for an: increase of 30.4 per cent.
‘George managed to send a tele~|over the 1,503,362 tons shipped dur-
gram to Ted. “Get out the Welcome | ing the first six months of last year,
mat and make it big.” it was shown in figures released by
paige the Newsprint Association of Canada,
Ted tried his best. He even had; Production during June was 334,-
neighboring cowhands on horseback | 207. tons against 266,417 during
meet them at the ranch gate t0} June, 1945, and shipments totalled
Canadian post office methods in Ot-
_. The ‘Chinese officials left China in
| July, 1945, and spent six months in
aeege. ba and one month in New
ments. before comihg to Ottawa, The
delegation now are back in the
United States where they will inspect
postal facilities in Chicago’ and San
Francisco before their return to
China in September.
The delegation are’ studying the
American and. Canadian ‘postal sys-
tems from the inner sanctum of the
‘Jeentral, organization- to the . outer-
Most fringes. Bach official looks after
‘
@ particular division. ,
"She
It’s
of China is/very similar to Canada’s
They make use of air. mail, postal
notes, money orders and postal say
their mechanical equipment is much
the same, but their great difficulty
is the lack of sufficient equipment. to
Despite inflation in China postal
rates have heen little affected and
now are on a par with Canada.
Mr, " Chang, -who specializes in
€quipment and supplies, praised the
anadian postal-system for its eco-
mic and efficient methods.
/ “Canada, which manufactures more
paper than any country in the world,
has the -most effective way of con-
serving cane in the post office that
We've seen,” said Mr. Chang.
The Chinese officials expressed
gratitude and appreciation for the
ENSURES EASY
BAKING—MAKES
LUSCIOUS, SWEET-f
TASTING, EVEN-
TEXTURED LOAVES
2
TO PROTECT POTENCY —
ALWAYS DEPENDABLE},
Flying Nurse
To The Sick Over A Wide
Area In Australia -
SYDNEY, Australia. — Travelling
hundreds of miles through floods,
duststorms or rain to attend the sick,
is all in the day's work for Sister
MoS
OUR COMPLETE
SHORT STORY—
AMAZINGLY
YOURS ©
By VERN GODKIN
ing Nurse”. . Appointed to the Flying
Doctor Base at Broken Hill in the
far west_of New South Wales, she
attends cases within a 500-mile
radius, reaching her patients by
whatever transport is available:
The Flying Doctor Service of Aus-
tralia is an Australia-wide organiza-
tion which provides medical aid. to
settlers in the far “outback” of the
and} continent. In it; medicine, aviation
° “ae * .
Cunyitant Well, isn’t she
Wheeler Newspaper Syndicate
. Fold seasoned tabvage,* apples; “and
nuts into Jell-O. Turn into individ-
ual molds. Chill until firm, Un-
mold on crisp lettuce: Garnish with
dressing... Serves six.
SPICE CAKE
% cup butter ~—
1 cup brown sugar
2 eggs
1 cup-chopped floured dates
1% cups cake flour
Service of goodwill.>,There are eight
bases ‘throughout Australia,
covering a radius of about 500 miles.
At each base there is a doctor and
at least. one plane, fully equipped
with medical supplies and stretchers.
‘Sometimes Sister Blanch accompanies
the doctor on his trips, but she fre-
quently sets out. on a solitary jour-
ney to reach some case the doctor
escort their taxi the last half mile.~ | 322,805 tons against. 267,163 tons.
Amelia __was impressed, _but__not | The_ six-month—production—for— :
fooled. - She was. looking for Judy. United States reached 387,695 tons,|%!@" Postal authorities. Every op-:
They found her at the ranch house,/an increase of 5.5 per cent. over the|P°Ttunity was given them ‘to. make
dressed in jeans, riding boots, and | 367,695 tons for the similar period|® careful study of the Canadian sys-
an, orange silk shirt: open at the) of 1945,"and shipments were 387,843 | ‘°™- :
throat, Z Bas ya |tons against 364,313 tons, June pro-
Amelia gulp in unbelief. “Why, I duction’ totalled -61,241 tons against
was never so amazed in my life,”| 60,828 tons during June 1945, and
| She declared to George as they got| shipments reached 61,671 tons.against| Attends
into bed a few hours later. “My/56 492 tons. | *
Judy, dressed like a movie cowgirl . .: PENT Eater :
and proud of it, .. and the house, | SELECTED Chen teem nen ene re eer rn —
all in perfect order ... . and she :
wouldn't let me do a thing!” R
“That dinner wasn’t bad either,” ECIPES
George added. “Bad!. It was per-
fect. I couldn’t have done better! QARBAGE AND APPLE SALAD
myself, It’s amazing,” she repeated, 1 package Lemon Jell-O
almost regretfully. ,2.cups hot water
George chuckled. % cup shredded cabbage
your daughter?” 3 4 teaspoons vinegar
He would like to have seen Ted} .% teaspoon galt \
7 | about now and said, “IT told you so,” a cup eel a ‘s
[OOKING at her-husband as though |@s Ne recalied thelr lunch 8 month) poche gelico in hot water. Chill
it were his fault, Amelia Ames} ”..;..., until slightly thickened.
complained, “this Chow Mein is too aly pte’ ey, oy; ey ty ery Combine cabbage, vinegar,
ae Ranken ae ie “Just give her a chance to break the
‘tell me.that is the way I ordered it, estaba gy Si icin ti ona
either, I know I said crisp but they| ““teq hadn't looked too convinced
didn’t have to get it so brittle. then, but he had the proof now. In
George Ames grinned godd-na-| fact when he had said goodnight, he
turedly-and winked at his daughter | pad whispered, “‘She’s a regular chip
and son-in-law. . They started to} of the old block,” and winked and
smile, sobered as Mrs. Ames spoke nodded at Amelia.
again, ‘Judy, eat your Egg Foo sat EES NS, SAU RE
Yung. It’s good for you, and you Well-Kept Secret
is too busy to attend. Nearly al-
t, think i iy y
airy isk P ata ek ei oo sated 2 fepe Matrons baking powder ways the journeys are long and
- get you, built up.” « Germany ‘Had. Knitting Machine Jor) + tap. c on, cloves, and nut- saber tglnet BRAS BS: UR CORK
Judy opened her. imouth to say Making; Runproot Hosiery mer ;
% cup cold’ water
Runproof hosiery for women can Method: Ghekaiibatter aid sugar,
sométhing, then started eating. Ted
be made by a knitting machine de-
frowned. “She weighs ag much, as
Stamp Collection
d bea 2 .
___she_ever_did,” he anid. veloped _by_ the Germans, according (000 ot wegen wise Hour walt ander ep
si o the U.S. commerce department. Historic Envelopes Were Auctioned
“well, she wouldn’t if I didn’t spices, at least three times, and add|~. In United St
e A team of experts digging around |aiternately with the water, starting States
watch over her, Look what happened
when you moved to Albany. Poor
Judy was worn out: just from the
packing up, If I hadn’t gone right
along with her and helped her get
settled she’d have been in bed for a
month . . ,.and also I had to come
up there every other week to see
that she took care of herself. ‘That's
why I insisted that you move back
here again near us so that I could
keep. a closer eye on her. Even now
I hate to go off on this trip with
George for fear she'll do’ something
' foolish.” E
George pulled out his watch.
“We'd better hurry or we'll be late
i ifor! the: Bowe! 2823S VAR yee
The suggestion worked, for Amelia
never liked to be late for anything.
But George was uneasy, for he had
an idea what was going through
Ted's mind. The boy had a good
healthy. pride, and even though he
was very much in love with Judy,
there was a limit to some things.
He hadn’t learned yet that Amelia’s
crisp manner was just a cover up to
hide a soft heart.
After they had left the young]:
couple at«their apartment and were
on their way home, George ventured
a suggestion. “Don't you think
you're babying Judy a little too
much? After all she is grown up
and has been married a year.” :
Amelia almost drove through a
‘stop light before she snapped, “Of
course not. I know my daughter.
She can’t do things right without
me. I've always looked after. her,
in Germany for. new types. of ma-
chines for the commerce department
uncovered it. It is a novel warp
knitting machine which produces a
runproof reinforced’ hosiery fabric.
The Germans held_it a closely guard-
ed secret during the war and per-
mitted only a limited number to
operate in a few Bavarian and
Czechoslovakian mills. The one -in-|
vestigated by the team was found in AC if E S
Czechoslovakia. : ‘ 7)
with the flour, beat hard for at least; NEW YORK.—A set of six en-
three minutes, bake in a well greased|Velopes commemorating .the- Royal
loaf pan for about 45 minutes .in a] Visit to Canada and the United States
$25 deg. F. A boiled icing is nice on}in 1989 was auctioned for $40, at the
this cake. third and final disposal of the stamp
collection of the late President
Roosevelt, ‘The Canadian envelopes
were postmarked June 7, 12 and 13.
The American covers were cancelled
Y June 10 and 11... All envelopes car-
ried the Royal train postmark’ and
were addressed to President Roose-
velt at the White House in Washing-
ton.
To Feel Right — Eat Right!
FLY MENACE
Reminding Canadians that files
are germ-carriers, the Department of
National Health and Welfare, Ot-
tawa, has issued~a seasonable warn=
ing in the war against these pests.
It is advised that special care be
taken this summer .to check screen-
ing to keep flies out of buildings,
particularly where there are young
children. © ee
SMALLPOX THREAT
In view of a “definite risk” of scat-
tered. outbreaks of smallpox in Can-
ada, the Canadian” Medical Associa-
‘tion Journal, in its current issue,
urges a campaign in support of vac-
cination and re-vaccination, Heavy
postwar travel is facilitating spread
of smallpox into areas relatively free,
the Journal reports.
and Pil always have to.”
i a
George gave up. But it was time
He lay
to do something about it.
SIXTY ESCAPE IN NIGHT CLOTHES AS BUILDING BURNS—!
ar i the main
‘| building of the Canadian Keswick Bible Conference near Port Carling, Ont., forcing 60
Me
:
attire. Damage was set at $100,000. This is an air view of the building.
. ‘ ‘ Sem ‘ Pee
studyig U.S. postal sthprove-|.
Fundamentally, the postal system |)
ings banks in the same way. Even|-
cope with the huge amount of mail.
co-operation extended them by Cana-|
Myra Blanch, Australia’s first “Fly-|
salt and let stand about 20 minutes,|and radio are combined’ in a unique) :
each |’
Tt must be something“ T-dtdn’t
a nn
BEAUTY QUEEN of the Calgary stampede is lovely Patsy Rodgers,
of Calgary, seen in the parade of cowgirls.
New York next October.
She will star in a big rodeo in
"y
JNRRRRRR ARREARS,
_. SMILE~AWHILE
Caller: “I am so sorry your
mistress is out. Do you think she
‘(will be at home this evening?”
Maid: . “She'll have to be; its
my night out.” i :
* pe 3 * \A
Junior: “What's gossip, Dad?”
Dad: “Anything that goes in
one ear and over the back fence.”
. * * s
“My wife always gets historical
when I stay out late at night.”
“Hysterical, you mean.”
“No, historical. She digs ups all
my past.”
eat.” — ,
* *. * +
“Could you pay for an operation
if I thought one was necessary?”
“Would. you think one wag nec-
essary if I couldn’t pay for it?
ba * s s
“J ordered a dozen oranges, but
you only sent me ten.”
“Part of our service, madam.
Two were bad, so we saved you
the trouble of throwing them
away.”
s 2 ae s
“What do you think of the latest
news of the foreign situation,
Senator?”
“Don't: bother me.
on the radio and talk.
I gotta get
In a crisis
~like this -there-is-no-time-to—think.”"
s * * *
~ “My husband is away so much
‘I want a parrot for company,
Does this one use rough lan-
guage?”
“Lady, with this bird in the
house you’d never miss your
husband!” .
s s s °
.Guest: Look: here! How long
must I wait for the half portion
of duck I ordered.”
Waiter: “Till somebody orders
the other half. We can’t go out
and kill half a duck.”
. * 6 s
Bill: “These are the ruins of a
castle built by William the Con-
queror.”” ,
. Wealthy Aunt: “Yes, but why
on earth did he build it so far
from the railway station.”
Proprietor; ‘You come into my
restaurant, you order a glass of
‘water, you drink it, and you calmly
walk out!”
Scot: “What were ye expectin’
| me to do, mon? Stagger, oot?”
“Good morning,” came the
cheerful volce over the telephone.
“This is Morrison, Morrison &
_Morrison,”
“Oh!” returned the startled
voice at the other end of the
“, wire. “Good morning, good morn- *
2683
ing and*good morning.”
2
“Yokes Form Sleeves
By ANNE ADAMS
Sure-to-succeed style for active or
spectator-sports is this really smart,
new shortwaister! Pattern 4529 is
to wear.
Pattern 4529 comes in sizes 14, 16,
18, 20; 32, 84, 36, 38, 40, 42, Size
16 takes 2% yards 39 inch.
Send twenty cents (20c) in coins
(stamps cannot be accepted) for this
pattern, Write plainly Size, Name,
Address. and Style Number ‘and send
orders to. the Anne Adams Pattern
Dept., Winnipeg Newspaper Union,
175. McDermot Ave. E., Winnipeg,
Man.
HOME SAFETY
It is unsafe to leave an infant on
a high table, unprotected bed, or other
unguarded high place, even for an
instant, warns the Department of
National. Health and Welfare, Ot-
tawa. If mothers, must turn to some-
thing else for a moment, after plac-
ing a child in such @ place, they are
urged to avoid home accidents by
picking up and holding the child, or
placing the little one back in the
crib. Babies, it is pointed out,
squirm so quickly, and may fall ‘if
a mother allows her attention to be
diverted even momentarily,
| HEMORRHOIDS
2 jal Remedies
by the of Mecca Ointment
ecca Pile Remedy No. 1 ig for Protruding
Pisedtng Piles, and is sold ja with
aeons
an ‘by a Druggist. ?
is for
umber your
4
simple to sew and simply ~detightful-——-
)
*.
Se
Blairmore, Alta., Friday, Aug. 2, 1946
~ from 1964 to 1909: then The
- change had been made, and
_all commereial printing will
around’ the block,” says an authority|@
- In the department of national health
_ George Baines, of Calgary, r, are visit-
__C,-Gilmar;-and “are going” “Onto” thet
' Scotland recently;-ventured to deliver
that was to bring happ‘ness, re beth
- og
‘
| ~or ig it that Mr. Attlee has |
foen Se Song Meat ‘system can bring happiness,
the past year? health and prosperiiy, may ‘be in-
‘In Brgland recently 1 attended | tended aa pint to'the wotkers not to
number, of services. in churches. expect too much from his government.
of Yarioug denominations in the citjes| My own opinion is that the working
Se ee and the small towns,-atal I was de-] people of Britain are not and never
che Pant Ginee Daeetiamee teen pressed to find them so poorly at-could be Socialists, and their present
tended, At ore morning service in ‘& indifference toward ithe churches is
{ | BURIRMORE, ALBERTA Congregational ‘church, ‘loca‘ed in @ que in part to the spate of socialist
“Weekly
RES a9
» jdensely: populated suburb of a large propaganda which assumed the form
pitbscrotion, 0 all nm Unite eity, thery were not more than ten orl or a religious erusade. A Glasgow
preyed Great Britain $20 50; For- fifteen adults present, including | the mah explained this situation to me by
minister and the organist, Thére was eaying that the working people of
no choir. At a Wesleyn church in a) Britain had been “kept, down” and
small town there were about twenty- jhad not enjoyed the privileges which
five present at a morning service, and are common to the people of Canada
of/at the evening service.in the lading and the United States. He said, for
Anglican church: in the ‘same town,| instance, that if a working man were
the choir, all boys, was larger’ than to’ own a motor car his employer
the congregation. The Central Hall ti sonid's accuse him of extravagan.© and
London, which was built. to accomo-| claim that he was getting too hig!
|
|
'
- Business locals, 15¢ per line.
1 notices, 15¢ line for first
RB. el 12¢ per li ine fae oath “poke
genet insertion.
Rom "bat lists a “floral hart
¢ o
charged at 10 cents pet line. -
Display advt. rates on ‘application,
u"R, McLEOD, PUBLISHER 2
@ate ‘the crowds which flocked to wages. During the war, ho
services in former days, was three-\ working people earned bg wal
quarters wmpty at the morning serv-' and they have still. more money ¢
ice, although the wasq special Ameri- they can spend on the necessaries’ pf
can pitacher for the day; and ‘there. life. This sudden acquisition. of money,
was a very fine choir.
With this issue. of ‘the
paper, our readers will note
a change in name, as well as
publisher. In its colorfffl ca-
reer, this paper has been
known under several names,
as The Blairmore Times and
‘Crows’ Nest Pass Advocate,
under Harry J. Matheson,
I did not attend any of the Evange- the people’s head” and ‘they’ believe
eal conyenticles, but.I was told that) that socialism will continue eet
these were yery ‘much batter attended, time” prosperity. : eh
and that they were more popular with
cities. the motion picture theatres! pie, although’ they continue to submit
are open on Sundays and thece areas to strict governmental discipline,
well if not better attended than on too free-thinking to submit to ‘nily
week days, There aze ‘also ‘Sunday! form of permanent dictatorship. # 2:
‘sports which attract a large follow- one thing, they are’ too -argun nth
Enterprise, under the late/i™s tive, and’ there are signs that they
editor W. J. Bartlett, ‘$0. u| Judging by, my-conversations with] are already arguing themselves 0
change of name fox: The] various: types of people, in Britain Socialism *as’ they argued themselves
Blairmore Graphic” is in|and particularly ‘with working men, 1| into. it. “They are disc overing. that
keeping with . the Shir ide would say that they were intensely| their political ideal is not comment
stages. _” | interested in politics. On the one hand) Russia, but. cemocratic Canada. -
This does a mean. ajthe anti-socialista* are e‘ither’ pessi-| British people are.also escentially, a
change in policy; endeavor mistie about ‘the future or they be-|ligious, and “when they hate
will be made to carry on | lieve the people will soon tire of the} all,” they will retyrn.
tradition established by pre-| == aR
decessors and all contracts
, be executed as if no
Blairmore: [nterprise. and
Frank ‘Vindieator, under
Barrett. & MeDonald; later
in 1910 as The Blairmore
be promptly and epriently
looked after.
. LT ‘i
HEALTH IN THE OPEN ~
Health authorities at’ Ottawa ur:se
‘all Canadians t6 make a point of g-xt-.
ting out of doors éarly | after supper,
.this summer, “Do, anything you like—
even if it’s only exercising the dog
said the Glasgow man, had “gone | tol.
There may be a good deal of truth ¢
the working peopie. In all the large in that diagnosis, but the British peo-
LR SE gp mR eS CORA A nt NM AO NERO EI OT I,
. 4 3 ae eer aay 1%
‘
a ee PRIDAY, AUGUEN A Moet oo SOR ie a ui sacs ; 3
Woe a Te me RE Ge Ee
- Pi ry
ees eae
" Beidg in the nature of a remiader'of :
how the Royal Bank can help to make os
your holiday happy and carefree.
Pe mes eee wae sananaananunae
s
s
2
Make sure your valuables are safely
tucked away in your Safe Deposit Box.
Or-stow them in our vaults for safe-
The cost is trifling. Ask at:
any branch.
pene ot
+ ‘moooncesestess
2. Change your reserve cash into
Travellers’
Cheques... the safe worry-
free way to carty travel funds. As
good as money anywhere, If you lose
them, you' "re not out a cent
ee eee
Jonbcdbunasabebvabbmedwanaauanm= Dl aa adhe Aled ah lara lehahettentahetetahetades wanelatabesl 4
5. Should you wish to. combine
business with pleasure you will find the _
local Royal Bank Manager in afy
district a mine of information on
‘local business conditions. j
i: Should you run short of cash during —
your trip call on the nearest Royal
Bank branch. The local manager is
your direct line of communication
back to voor own home branch.
~~
Be Sg et RT SARS py lap GP
4. Arrange to hive your salary or
_ other income credited to your account
in your absence. Clean up unpaid bills _
with Cheques against your Royal |
Bank account or mail, Royal Beek
Money Orders. ; from-home in all financial matters;
ened e ne ennn nine eee nn enn aw nen wn dea nanan ease renee saan nnn nnenenans
’ pe
Reem ee ee mmm ee
G. If you are travelling abroad,
remember The Royal Bank operates
‘branches in the West Indies, Central
‘and South-America, New York, Lon-
donand Paris... each branch a home-
a ees aa
ie eee
: J aeons ee
our branches for cashing Travellers’ Chequesjnego- -
"United States Tourists axe cordially invited to use : : y rr ;
f ane Tote onirnron Deans nat baAhind Seeyiek
i oe
THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA
BLAIRMORE BRANCH --M, G. SMITH, Manager
BELLEVUE BRANCH «++ L, B. BONG, Manager Hila traced
and welfare, “do some gardening, 3
_walk, Play tennis, or anything which
will keep you'in the fresh air when
the weather is fine.” For thoss who are
housé bound, sitting by an open win-}’
dow. in summer, or on the porch, is
also recommended.
Scien tek R tSe2 i
Mrs. Martin Foster and Miss Roze
Steffler, of Guelph, Ontario, and Mrs.
ing here’ at the home of Mr and Mrs.
coast to spend a few weeks with Mrs.
McEwen, at Gibson Landing, BC.
ATTLEE APPEALS FOR ‘
SPIRITUAL LEADERSHIP?
(By Lewis Milligan)
Prime Minister Atttze, speaking at
the annual assembly of tze Church of
We are agents for Cas S
Leading Mantfacturer.
See us about your-next order.
a little sermon to the ministers of that
body on the need for spiritual leader-
ship. He spoke in these words: “No
social system will bring us happiness,
health and prosperity unless - it. is
inspired by something greater than
materialism. The world today has
need of spiritual leadership. What-
ever the difference - between the
various churches, they are at one in
holding ‘before mankind absolute
values in setting standards of con-
duct beyond that of self-interest of
the individual, the group or the
nation,”
Coming from the head of a Laber
government which came to pewer by
premising to set up a social system
Blairmore Graphic ~~
‘In Alberta we have a great heritage in summer, soil erosion and all the cther {lls
our forests and streams. If.our forests are that occur in any country where the balance ‘
blackened -and ruined by fire instead of of nature is upset by the destruction of a
“forest industries supplying the building: great part of the forest.
material we require and providing a living Your local ranger contends that a lot of |
~ directly and indirectly for thousands of . good.-citizens.live in his district, He takes
people, instead of our shady playgrounds, this opportunity to thank you for the co
big game, fur bearing- animals and our operation you gave him last year and he is ~ |
pleasant streams, what are we going to sure the more you realize the situation, the
have? A ruined industry, roaring torrents more he can count on your co-operation
ia. the spring and dry water courses in the and assistance,
a he < fies
_ GOVERNMENT OF THE ad
PROVINCE OF ALBERTA |
RTMENT
ak ane MINES
a “ e
FOREST éenvion
Sea rym pemm meyrommnindrpperyencreti9htrwvarenna herpes remnente ten meme neem
: ,
o
7
i Ei . et ges ™ .
f 7 ue? i) ‘.
* F a
' ‘THE BLAIBMORE GRAPHIC; FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, 1946,
an Ti Magee ot ‘ , ¥ hs vk Ue d; PYM: ELE PRO ’ a
r ~
4 hi 4. -, 4
id -
. c ois j , C) 3
T ) Oy A ’
Whrdot i i id y ‘ Ou é
a - e $ ¥ : ay id ‘ 4 ‘ 4 , J ie r op ; :
73 ¥ % ‘ s vp » Ki t
i j e
t * ‘
c ms a a
‘
7 »
f
\ See
yi J Py 7
1 iit :
eos oH om ; 22th) Mae oa
bt stabbing headlight... as you've
f watched a long train of Canadian Pacific freight ‘cars rumble through the night,
By a cot ee au
Ee par pe
os = = ot ae = a : - ; me
To all-of us they are bringing food, coal, building materials, household furnishings, : }
. ¥ ar . ‘
lumber; paper, machinery —all the thousand-and-one items which make up,
a nation’s: domestic and export trade. And they are doing it efficiently
: aaa ee z
3 - *
and cheaply ...every day and night inthe year!" > .
o”
Bae :
- S THE WORLD
~ 2 ae e
ih me
i
S ee, * ; . * 5
* J
" ; 4
ie
; 4 : NS ‘a 4 Rot 3 : :
*., ; i ay
_ ag /
o Ey’ i x t
. 5
; }
SOP EO OP OL Or
. }
£4 Sige EELS LEP RS PPPLA PL ERD hi bimmrteety
- |
j
eee Ctl a af aa
A, Snag hen Sige cay
La
' Winnipeg is a inch from Nome, and two inches from Tokyo.
- On The Future
CORST.T0-COAST
KELLOGG’S ARE CANADA'S
choice
or
any meal
anytime!
Want an idea that will help you
save time and work—and at
the same time keep meals more
interesting for your family?.
Thousands feature Kellogg’s
not only for breakfast but for
quick snacks anytime of: day! Pep Bran Flakes
—~ Pep, Corn. Flakes, All-Bran, | oreidle pothagaal
- Rite Krispies, Bran Flakes, wheat ere delicious,
extra crisp, extra
micl Rabe whole
‘amily will enjoy
meee" s Pep.
bles and All-Wheat are
all’ made. by Kellogg’ s, the
genes name in cereals!
SAVE TIME... SAVE FUEL... SAVE FOOD!
‘The Making Of One World —
AMONG THE MOST IMPORTANT fac factors in the making of the ‘one
world” about which we hear so much today, is the airplane. “Tt, more than
anything else, has reduced the distance between countries, and continents
and made the world, indeed, into a relatively small neighborhood. Records
show that in the span of a little over one hundred years the rate of travel |-
has increased from ten miles an hour, which was the average speed of the
best stage coaches in England around the year 1830, to. the present ordinary
air speed of 300 miles per hour. In addition, we now have rocket ships
. which travel at six hundred miles an hour, and itis expected that the
newest and largest airliners, powered by jet-propulsion, will cross the
Atlantic Ocean in five hours, ©
es 28 + # 8 . ”
‘The development of air travel has not only
Has Raised Many lessened the distance between countries from
the point of view of travelling time but it has
New Problems altered their relative geographic positions.
Commenting on this in a recent article published by the Royal Bank of
Canada, the writer says: ‘Air travel has raised many new problems for
international solution, as well as pointing out some old worries, Before
development “of the airplane, Mercator’s map was all right. It did exag-
gerate the size of some countries, Greenland, for instance, but it Was a
good enough map for surface navigators. . An air map is quite different.
In the centre of the air map showing the northern hemisphere there is a
dot indicating the nortfrpole. Scattered over the circle are smaller dots
representing cities. Reykjavik is a dot about an inch from Montreal, Mos-
cow ig another point an inch beyond, and another inch takes one to Aderi:|’’
No boundary
lines on the air map say, “This is Canada”, or “This is Iceland”, or “This
‘is Japan”, If a man wished to Jeave Toronto for a flying visit to South
Africa, he might be tempted by the Mercator map to go by way of Miami,
Natal, (in Brazil, ) trans-Atlantic to West Africa, and thence south, but
“the air map ‘shows that his shorter toute is by way of Montreal, Labrador,
and Europe.”
oe ¢8¢ 8 @
It is doubtful whether the full effect which
modern developments in aviation will have on
the world are yet completely realized. Cana-
dians have become accustomed to the idea ‘of
crossing this continent from ~Halifax to Vancouver by air in less than
twelve hours, but the advantages of long distance flights overseas have not
Profound Effect
----yet-hecome.commonplace to the average citizen, It is possible now, however,
for a traveller to fly between Eastern Canada and any capital in Europe in
considerably less than twenty-four hours, The airplane has_ similarly.
lessened the distances over the vast stretches of the Pacific Ocean and
has, indeed, almost overnight linked up countries and continents, and made
us realize that there are few, if any remote places remaining in the world.
In our effort to win the war, tremendous advances have been made in air-
craft construction and flying technique, and these advances will have a pro-
found effect on life in the years to come.
a
. x=-x OUR CROSSWORD PUZZLE x-x
HORIZONTAL
1 Former
Russian ruler
vj
(pt.)
6 Consecrated
person
11 To tell
13 Persistent
aggressor
14 Indefinite
article
15 Punishment
17 Prefix: twice
18 Animal’s foot
20 Girl’s name
21 Beverage ’
22 Let it stand
24 Insane
25 Swordsman’s
dummystake
(pl.)
26 Church festival
28 Molten rgck
29 Musical
instrument
30 Rational
31 Observed
32 Wearing
a ie pare!
ountain lake
s 3 Anglo-Saxon
Money ~
36 Monetary unit
38 Possessive
Bes. EEE ee,
Ca T_T AW Tt WT
EREE BRE sm
Sit. Sak aie
‘onoun
39 To Join
41 Saint (Fem,
abbr.)
42 Symbol for
ruthenium
43 Studio
45 Prefix: not
°46 Expunges
43 Frees from
kp medtiones 21. Respects . earn
rea {
suddenly 23 Chinese coin {
51 Aicditerranean | 25 overnamerine
vessel fright
—= 27, penaute of
VERTICAL baths
1 Ensnares 28 Hindu pillar,
2 taw-making 30 At rest
body 31 One. of the
3 Indian planets
mulberry 32 Seed coating
4 knock 33 All
5 Stalk 34 Wearles
6 Location 35 Possessive
7 One, no matter pronoun
wich ° 37 Succinct . -
8 Preposition 39 Southwectern
9 Cloudlike mass indians
10 Decorates 40 Elongated fish
12 Gio paint. (pl)
13 Skidded on Ice | 43 Viper -
16 Sandarac tree | 44 Female ruff
‘10 Makers of 47 Cooled tava
@abrica 4 Near
‘
ENTERPRISE. BLAIRMORE. ALTA
| buted during the week September 9
0
j,
CAML
BAT TERIES
Give longer, ott
oan IT am going to -turn these
fhe pe Bae Board so that _clent service =
more meat will’be availablé for ship- “Chrome bilt. for”
ment overseas, I am not sure if I ‘é abi
should turn in the tokens as well as stay uty.
the coupons. Ask for them by
A.—The meat tokens are just as ndme—Burgess
valuable as the meat coupon. These
may be turned in. to your Local COMP
Ration Board. Local voluntary organ-| . BURGESS 5 BATTERY wrANY
izations will ‘also be collecting these
tokens and coupons, and a list of the ae
organizations may be obtained from
the Local Ration Board.
Regina Rifles
Eric _Luxton, A Former Member,
Receives Appointment
Former member “of the Regina
Rifles, Eric Luxton who fought dur-
ing. the European campaign from
Caen to the end of. hostilities, re-
cently succeeded Gordon Bigelow as
executive officer of the Regina Citi-
zens’ Rehabilitation Committee. Bige-
low is now with the Saskatchewan
Reconstruction Housing Corporation,
Luxton enlisted in June 1941, as
a lieutenant and was posted to the
Regina Rifles on his arrival in the
U.K. the following April. During the
D-day landings, he was instructing
in England but he rejoined his regi’
ment in France just north of Caen}
and was promoted to captain at the
same time. He commanded the regi-
mental anti-tank platoon,
Luxton saw plenty of action but
returned to Canada unscathed last
June, He was awarded a mention-in-
dispatches. He joined the Regina
Army Counselling service staff and
was discharged last month when i
coniesi
Q.—When will ration book 6 be
distributed ?
A.—Ration -book 6 will be distri-
tay Pepeamnes 16,
/ Oo
Q.—When will the first ration
coupons be valid in ration book 6?
A.—The first coupons in ration
book 6 become valid September 19th.
Latecomers’ books will not be issued
until September 30 and they will
therefore not be able to purchase
their rationed commodities until they
receive their new book. You should
make every effort. to obtain your new
book in the distribution period.
Q.—Must I present my ration book
No. 5 when I go for my new book?
A:—You must have your ration
book five with you. It is necessary
for you to fill in the green RB 191
card which is in the ration. book you
now have. ae rae re va
:
commenced his new duties. He and
his wife have a,small daughter. Lux-
ton plans to return to university and
complete the studies he began prior
to the war.
Gasoline Ration .
Has Been Increased Since U.S, Loan
‘is Was Made
LONDON.—Fuel “Minister ‘Shiriwell
told tha House of Commons that the
basic British gasoline ration will be
increased. 50 per cent., because of
purchases made possible by the $3,-
750,000,000 _ loan. nun the United
States.
The increase will” allow pleasure
automobiles to be driven about 270
miles a. month instead of the present
480 miles. Mr. Shinwell said a rather |
“CHAPTER ‘DEDICATED | more, gen allowance would be
—In porta the first memaberot made for essential industrial users.
the R.C.A.F. women’s division to be .
Killed on active service, a group of BOTH WERE INVENTORS\
Eli Whitney inyented the cotton
Canadian girls have named their club
the Section Officer Rose Goodman|gin and in 1858 Eli Whitney Blake
chapter of B’nai B'rith girls, it was|of New Haven, Conn=—no relation—
announced by Edith Sugarman, presi-| invented a stone crusher that made
dent of the recently formed group.| possible the economical construction
Section Officer Goodman, a native] of highways on a large scale.
of New Glasgow, N:S., enlisted in the. :
R.C.A.F. in October, 1941, and re-
ceived’ her preliminary training in
Toronto as a member of the first
class of 150 to graduate from the
administrative training class. She
was killed in January, 1942, when the
training plane in which she was fly-.
ing crashed near Claresholm, Alta.
LEARN HAIRDRESSING
Clean, steady, interesting, refined,
_ good paying profession. Hundreds
‘of positions now open. Many start
own shops. Train_under direct super-
vision of outstanding beauty culture
_experts, Complete, thorough, superior
training. ~ @ Nu-Fashion— Eo
assures success, Write or Call—
NU-FASHION BEAUTY SCHOOL
| 327 Portage Ave. . Winnipeg, Man.
Government Concept
British Crown Will Always Be A
' Unifying Force
The British Crown is a unifying,
rather than a diversive force in a
Commonwealth which demands a
symbol to bolster its unity during the
transition from Empire to a new
form of international society. The
Royal Family is the object of wide-
spread respect and affection, and it
is not easy to see just what concept
could supplant it, should Britain turn
to republican forms.
The structure of the Comm
wealth is quite different from t of
the United States, where a single flag
has become. accepted as the rallying |
sight for the people. There are sev-
eral flags in the British Comrion-
wealth today and there may be
more.—New York Herald Tribune,
“NOT EVEN LOOKS. =~
The theatrical producer was inter-
viewing applicants for the new show.
The first girl came in and he asked:
“Can you dance?”
“No,” the girl replied. —
“Can you sing?” 7 es
“No, ”
“Well, can you act?”
“Not very well,”
“Then what did you. come here
fore?”
“My looks,”
“Well, you can have a look round, |-
if you like, but I don't think you'll
find them here.”
‘Glear Stuffy Heads
Rel i eve
mucus-choked
nostrils...
soothe in-
flamed mem
branes,
Ground has been broken for con-
struction of Calgary’s new half mil-
lion dollar Fleischmann’s Yeast plant.
The new plant, on 15th street, south
of the Calgary Brewing & Malting
Company, will be one of the most
‘|modern yeast plants in the world. It
will supply fresh yeast to the huge
breathe ¢ freel reely market of bread bakers, commereial
!
seule domestic, throughout Western
; Operation is expected to
commence early in 1947.
; “We thought that our modern
|plant in Eastern Canada was the
last word in yeast manufacturing,”
ad and tubes
MENTHOLATUM
COMFORT Du
said William L. Cunliffe, President of
rr
tions for production of this crop ex-
ist in other large sections ‘of the
country. High labor requirements
and competition ‘from intensive crops
restrict the area_of the sugar beet
crop. In Ontario, beets are grown
in Essex, Kent, Elgin, Middlesex and
Lambton. counties. The production
from this area was at one time the
sole Canadian supply of beet sugar.
Factories are located at atham
and Wallaceburg... In recent years,
however, the largest area in beets
has been grown on irrigated land in
Southern Alberta. Commencing in
1940, Manitoba farmers’ began. pro-
ducing this crop for processing in a,
hew factory at Fort Garry. Later
another new factory was built at- St.
Hilaire in Quebec and Speration be-
gan in 1944,
During recent years, and chiefly
‘since the outbreak of war, great
progress has been made in mechan-
izing the production of. beets. In
lier years, contract labor was em-
ployed on a large scale. With the
shortage of labor in wartime, the
problem’ was met in part by the util-,
ization of prisoners of war buf it had
to be dealt with on. a more perma-
nent basis. Thus planters have been
improved so that a more even stand
may be obtained, Thinning and block-
ing’ machines have been developed.
Harvesting and topping and unload-
ing machines have been introduced
én many farms. The supply of these
machines is. still small and some im-
perfections gre still to be overcome,
but the back-breaking work in hand-
ling beets on the farm is on the way
out. At the factory, mechanical un-
loading and, handling have been suc-
cessfully applied.
Firmness of* purpose is one of the |.
most necessary sinews' of character, tu
and one of: the best instruments of
sucgess. .—Chesterfield,
The superior man is firm in the
|right way, and not merely firm.— |
‘Confucius.
The firm, without pliancy, arid ‘the
pliant, without firmness, resemble
vessels without. water, and water |
without. vessels.—Lavater.
c bury.
Steadfastness is a noble . quality,
but, unguided by knowledge or humil-
ity, it becomes rashness, or obstinacy.
—Swartz,
Every man and woman should be |
today a law to himself, herself,—a
Iaw of loyalty to Jesus’ Sermon on
the Mount.—Mary Baker Eddy.
It is wonderful what strength of
purpose and boldness and energy of
will are roused -by the assurance that
ely are doing our duty. —Scott.
‘There is a 1 higher “death Tate among |~
stable hands and hostlers between
the ages of 15 and 64 than in any}.
other gainfully employed group.
Standard Brands Limited, “but — so
many developments have come out of
biochemical technological research in
the Fleischmann Laboratories, under
the pressure of wartime needs, that
it will be possible to incorporate a
whole series of improvements in
manufacture in the new Calgary
plent.” “
Mr. Cunliffe explained the reasons
for the company's choice of Calgary
as the site of the new establish-
ment, Fresh yeast, as @ living plant
organism, is extremely sensitive to
conditiong of atmosphere and water
supply. Fleischmann Laboratory
analysts, testing water in every dis-| sa
a
madi proven at re yecire
public acceptance.
‘WHY EXPERIMENT—WILSON'S
will kill: more flies at less than
any. other fly killer,
WILSON’S FLY PADS
ONLY 10¢' AT ANY RETAILER!
Conditions In China
Chiang Has Impaired Relations With
The United States
-~UNRRA’s stoppage of relief—other
than vital foods—to China, comes on
‘the heels of the -breakdown of the
Kuomintang-Yenan triice conferences
in Nanking. It.is an unhappy indica-—
tion that Chiang Kai-shek may have '
so long put off his duty, to demo-—
cratize the Chinese Government that”
matters are slipping out of his hands.
By his resentfulness of construc- .
tive criticism and his stubborn re-
fusal to clean up what has become —
one of the dirtiest governments in
the world, Chiang has impaired his
relations with one of his last’ strong
friends, the United States. Twice
successively he has asked for the
removal of an UNRRA China direc-.
tor of supplies who dared. criticize
the clogging-up and political use of
relief. UNRRA Director-General La-
Guardia’s stoppage of relief is a
damaging political blow. te
.
If Chiang\still luckily has a chance-~
to restore his authority by exercis-
ing the graft and fascism in his Gov-'
ernment, after so much procrastina-
tion, he cannot afford to lose a day
in getting about it.—St. Louls Post-
Dispatch.
: Statue Is Back
Winged God Of Love Again On
Pedestal In-London ~ .
London’s best-loved statue has re-
rned to Piccadilly.
Eros, winged god of love, hag been
taken from his wartime hiding place
in Surrey and placed on his old pedes-
tal in Piccadilly circus for the first ~
time in seven years.
Since V-E day Londoners _ have
been noisy in their clamor for return”
of the famed statue, unveiled in 1898
as a memorial to the Earl of Shaftes-
While Eros. was away, savings
posters sprouted at his old stand and -
became a familiar: sight to service-
‘lmen from Canada and other Allied
countries. i
Perfect rubies are much rarer than
good diamonds. -
nr Sn
Stop ten “aia
HALF MILLION DOLLAR YEAST PLANT
trict in Western Canada, found that
Calgary has ideal water for yeast
manufacture,
district is\also beneficial in che pro-
duction of high quality yeast.
‘While the new plant will be de-
voted initially to yeast manufacture,
local prpduction of other products of
Standard Brands Limited, for. West-
ern distribution, would be a logical,
development in the future, Mr.‘ Cun-
liffe stated. Calgary’ possesses
portant facilities for manufacturing,
including abundant ref and power,
and is ideally situatéd to serve en
firm growing Western market, he
ae
The cléar air in thig
im
’
- of taxation fields, the provincial
On The Question
Of Taxation
- OTTAWA,—An understanding be-
tween the Dominion’and tche-
“wan is being sought by the province
as to its liability for payment of
$92,000,000 in provincial treasury |
bills, now held by Ottawa,
Saskatchewan’ wants to know just
how much of the total of these bills
will be liable for payment at some
future date.
The. bills were incurred by the
province during the drouth period
for relief and seed grain.
~The Saskatchewan government is
secking such an understanding before
it enters into an interim agreement
with the Dominion government to
vacate certain taxation fields based
on the budget proposals to the prov-
inces.
Hoh. C. M> Fines, provincial treas-
urer of Saskatchewan, accompanied
by his deputy, Thomas Lax, was in
conference with Hon. Douglas Ab-
bott, acting minister of finance, and
Dr. W. C. Clark, deputy finance min-
ister at Ottawa.
Mr. Fines confirmed that the $92,-
000,000 Saskatchewan debt wea dis-
cussed,
Manitoba is indebted to the Do-
minion by $24,760,000, British Colum-
bia by $34,370,000 and Alberta by
$25,870,000. The debts of these three
provinces accrued under the Relief
Act.
Premier T. C, Douglas, of Saskat-
chewan, has taken the stand that
before entering into any pom heat
with Ottawa, involving the giving up
gov-
“ernment would require an under-
standing that Ottawa would not make
demand for the relief obligations
except under terms of an agreement
which the province would negotiate
with the Dominion government. The
federal government has refused to
give ip the right of set-off in any
agreement which it signs.
As a result, Saskatchewan points
out it could not sign an agreement
under which the Dominion could
withhold the province’s entire sub-
sidy or a substantial portiqg of it by
applying it against the treasury bills
which Ottawa now holds. The right
to set-off with regard to future
obligations Saskatchewan is prepared
to agree to, but it wants an under-
standing in regard to. that. right in-
volving the millions incurred during
the drouth and depression period,
Commenting onthe budget pro-
‘posalsefor agreements with the prov-
inces, Mr. Fines in an “interview,
pointed out that under the plan sub-
mitted by Ottawa to the Dominion-
provincial’ conference this spring,
Saskatchewan would have benefited
to the extent of $53,000,000, Under.
the budget “proposals Saskatchewan
will only benefit by $13,300,000. °
“Saskatchewan is giving up every-
thing it was called upon to give up
under the more generous Dominion-
provincial ‘proposal including the suc-
cession duty, income tax and corp-
oration tax fields and in return we)
are getting $39,000,000 less. This
means Saskatchewan is left without
the social security that would have
been possible under the offer to the
SORTER S, "Mr. Fines said.
ANOTHER PROBLEM
-_—
Britain Facing Crisis This Winter In
Short Coal Supply
LONDON.—Britain’s coal shortage,
a constant threat in war, is provid-
ing an equal peril in peacetime.
For the -fifth year in succession,
nobody can* say definitely whether
the country will have enough coal to
keep going during the winter.
The coal problem assumed crisis
proportions in 1940 after the govern-
ment allowed a number of coal min-
ers to leave the pits for the armed
forces or war factories. As the war
“developed, ‘the demand of munition
factories and. other establishments
grew tremendously and the mining
industry’s manpower reserves wore
thin, Falling output per man—accen-
tuated by a deterioration in physical
standards—was another factor,
Today British coal mines still are
short of workers. '
Nationalization of the mines by the
Labor government may improve the
situation, but as yet the government
has not had time to mechanize the
industry to a level comparable with
that in the United States coal
mines,
Mr. Shinwell’s vulnerable position
- fs complicated by the* expansion of
British export industry. Demands for
coal, electricity ‘and coke for indus-
trial purposes are steadily rising.
Domestic consumption is still on the
increase, fed by the large number of
electrical appliances now available to
the public.
One disability which seems perma-
nent is that many miners who left
the pits during the war show no in-
clination to return.
/WILL TOUR CANADA
BRISTTOL, Eng.—A standard pro-
duction model of the Bristol 170, first
post-war British civil airliner to ob-
tain an unrestricted certificate of air-
worthiness, soon will tour Canada,
the United States and Latin America | ing
2683/ tion as a-salt well it desired,
- on a, demonstration tour. .
.
THE ENTERPRISE,
VETS SAIL SCHOONER HALIFAX TO GREAT LAKES--“It’s heave-
ho and away’ we go to the Great Lakes” for Bill Higginson, Three Rivers,
the Great Lakes.
Que., and fellow townsman; Geoff Clewer.
lads plan to sail their 40-foot, 11-ton schooner Lady Nell from Halifax to
“Skipper” Bill and “crew” Geoff installed a 36-horsepower
The two former Canadian navy
marine engine before setting sail, Higginson bought the schooner in 1944
and has sailed the tiny vessel-up and down, the coast for the past two sum-
mers,
Further Light
Shed On China's
Internal Strife
Sen, widow of the founder of the
Chinese republic and sister-in-law of
said in a rare interview that a. de-
sire to promote war between the
United States and Russia motivates
Kuomintang (government party) re-
actionaries seeking to stir up. civil
war.
Inactive in politics for years, ‘she
came out of semi-retirement to urge}.
immediate establishment of a coali-
tion government in the country now
headed by her brother-in-law and to
such a move by cutting off all mili-
tary supplies to China.
Madame Sun said that Kuomintang
reactionaries were fostering a civil
war they can’t win ‘“‘because they
hope civil conflict in China will in-
cite war between America and the
U.S.8,.R. and thus at last crush
Chinese Communists.”
“The American people, who are
allies and long friends of China, must
be clearly told of this road to dis-
| aster,” she said.
“They must be told that American
reactionaries are teaming up with
Chinese reactionaries, each encourag-
ing the other. “They. must: be told
ban the presence of United States
armed forces on Chinese soil is not
strengthening peace and order among
the Chinese people.
SERVED PURPOSE
Liner Queen Mary May Be Withdrawn
From Transport Service
SOUTHAMPTON, England.—After
two.more trips; the Queen Mary is
expected to be withdrawn -from ser-
vice as a transport carrying depend-
ents of servicemen to Canada.
It could not be confirmed immedi-
ately whether the-Queen.Mary would |
be replacéd by other-tonnage-but-the.
expectation was that this would ‘be
unlikely, since the number of de-
pendents still in the United Kingdom
has been cut to about 20,000.
(A Canadian Press despatch from
Southampton placed the number
awaiting movement ‘to Canada as
15,070. wives and 4,830 children).
‘ Mévement of dependents from the
ESS et NO a A ee Se SE an en SO
appeal to the United States to foster
continent to Canada will be started.
shortly with the Lady Rodney as-
signed to a ‘shuttle service from a
continental port to Tilbury near Lon-
don. Dependents. will be taken from |
London by train to Southampton for
loading on big ships like the Aqui-.
tania. rs
NOW TROOP TRANSPORT
LONDON, — The Prince. Henry,
former Canadian Natibnal Steamships
luxury liner bought by the British
transport ministry from the Can-
adian War Assets Corporation for
£125,000 ($500,000), will be used ad
a troop transport.
head 16 years ago for Pacific coant
service the ship ‘registers 6,893 tons.
ALBERTA SALT WELLS _
CALGARY.—Not only oil but salt ,
may ‘be the objective of the Central |,
Plaing drilling search. ‘The Elk Point
No. 1 completed at 3,929 feet en- |
countered salt beds to a thickness |
of 760 feat, oMelals ots Calehsy 2°
firm arinounced, The casing is be-
left in the hole to permit utiliza-
at
iis
TAKES NEW JOB
MONTREAL.—Siz, Frederick Bow-
hill, who superintended the ferrying
of thousands of bombers from Mont-
real airport to all parts of the world
during the war, has left his post here
as United Kingdom representative on
the council. of the provisional inter-
national civil aviation organization
to take up_a new position in the Bri-
tish ministry of civil aviation.
Poland has exported 100,000 tons
of cement to the Soviet Untion in six
months.
RLATRMORE, ALTA,
being taken’ to asses# and improve
commonwealth . and empire defence
organization and to keep abreast of
developments in military science, The
Canadian Press learned.
London quarters cited: |
_1.. Field Marshal Viscount. Mont- |:
gomery is to visit Canada and the
United States shortly and it is antici-
pated that he will gather. and give
opinions on defence matters. Lord
Montgomery recently succeeded Lord
Alanbrooke as chief of the be quae
general staff.
2. Btrengtheniiig of military mis-
sions and-free defence consultations
between. the Dominions and the
United Kingdom are expected to de-
velop following commonwealth con-
aba in London last spring. °
aay Britain will keep the Dominions
iicched. on the , Progress of vital
experiments with ‘rockets and other
new weapons in the “dead centre”
region of Australia, :
4, Commonwealth defence plan-
hing assumes a lasting friendship
with United States) London is known
to look with a kindly eye on ar-
Tangements for joint» defence pro-
posed by Canada and the United
States.
5. Continued study is being given
to standardization of weapons used
by commonwealth countries. Can-
ada and United States are likely: to
agree on common gun bores and
Empire Defencel fim
\Measures Will
Be Soon Taken
~ LONDON. -! Snobtruaive steps are |-
ATTEMPT ON LIFE DENIED—
A. Yugoslay embassy spokesman in
London denies the Rome report of an
attempt on the life of Marshal Tito,
prime minister of Yugoslavia. No
confirmation of the story could be
obtained in any quarter, the: Yugo-
slay spokesman said. Neither the
Rome nor Belgrade radios men-
tioned it, The story arose when two
Rome newspapers carried a report
from Zagreb, Yugoslavia, credited to
a new right-wing: Italian news
agency called Minos, that Marshal
Tito was-wounded in the stomach by
&@ pistol bullet during the shit of
July 11-12,
DENIAL FROM CHINA
Government Claims. Failure In
Distributing Supplies Fault
Of UNRRA ;
W-ASHINGTON.—The Chinese gov-
other standards and the Romy ernment demanded that the United
is seen that other’ commonwealth
units will seek similar arrangements
with United States.
All discussions of commonwealth
defence by United Kingdom officials
are prefaced by two statements:
first, that they look forward to the!
United Nations eventually te ling |
over international defence. duties;
| Nations Relief .and Rehabilitation
Administration resume suspended re-
lie shipments to China, and in a
sharply worded statement it in-
, directly blamed UNRRA itself for
‘delays in distribution of supplies.
Fiorello LaGuardia, UNRRA direc-
tor, announced suspension of relief
shipments two weeks ago, attributing
3 }and: second, that the commonwealth} the action to jammed warhouses in
governments -are independent and|the China por. He said the jam
make their own decisions,
London! was due to failure of the Chinese
simply being the neat of one of the | government to distribute the ’ sup-
governments.
its present leader, Chiang Kai-shek, aOR SABER VAR 0° PEARANCE Te Ur RC Ee
plies.
NEHRU AND GHANDI BOTH APPROVE BRITISH INDEPENDENCE PLAN —Political and spiritual heads,
respectively, of the All-India Congress party, Pandit Nehru, left, and Mohandas Gandhi, enjoy an intermission
Both approve British independence plan though Nehru would drop Britain.
chuckle at party session in Bombay.
NEW NATION BORN AS PHILIPPINES BECOMES INDEPENDENT— Independence came to the” Philip-
pines July 4 under Manuel Roxas, president of the newly formed republic. Here, Roxas, centre, signs” agreement
cotahtiihting PA relations with the U.S, as Chief Justice M. V. Moran, left, looks on ’
hme tena
May Sign Jep
‘'Peace Treaty —
Next Spring
. TOKYO. — Allied occupation of
Japan’ has» developed so successfully
that,-a final peace treaty may be
signed next, spring and the origina’
occupation estimate of from five to
15 years radically reduced, it was be-
lieved in high Allied quarters.
The chief remaining bar to signa-
ture of a final peace treaty in the *
opinion of high Allied quarters was
said to be the question of reparations.
Supreme. headquarters here does .
not deal with reparations questions
but it was believed there might be
differences of opinion with Russia on
reparations which might block efforts
to sign an early Japanese peace
treaty. i
It was said here that if reparations
can be fixed and if no. other inter-
Allied differences arise there should
+e no reason why a final peace treaty
could not be signed possibly as early
as 20 months after the July 26 anni-
versary of the. Potsdam declaration.
That would mean a peace’ treaty
next spring.
One stumbling block on the repar-
ations issues was said to be the
status of machinery- and other ma-
terials removed by Russia from Man-
churia and Korea. Russia is said to,
regard these supplies—valued at hun-
dreds of millions of yen—as “war
booty” rather than reparations.
Onrice the peace treaty is signed .
it was said the matter of. further
occupation of Japan might be settled
much. more rapidly. than originally
supposed. In some quarters it was
thought a time limit on the occupa-
tion might even be Set before the
end of this year.
Allied officers were said to believe
generally that the bulk of the occupa-
tion’ forces should be withdrawn as
soon. as feasible. They believe the
difficulties of any military occupa-.
tion increase in direct ratio with the
lefigth of-the force’s stay in the oc-
cupied land.
They point out that there has been
no indication of any extensive effort
by the Japanese ultra-Nationalists to
re-establish: themselves ‘and that the
Japanese have shown great willing-
ness to accept the fact of their de-
feat and seem to be interested in re-
_|establishing themselves as a nation
worthy of international. respect.
_THE VETO QUESTION
Russia Definitely Holds Opinion It
‘* Should Not Be Ohan;cd ~ .
NEW YORK. — Russia holds the
firm, définite and’ final conviction. that
the veto in the United Nations. se-
curity ‘council should stand un-
changed, it was reliably reported in
‘| Soviet circles. °
This was. the first Russian re-
action on the veto question since Dr.
Herbert V. Evatt, Australian foreign
minister, attacked the veto in a re-
cent broadcast address.
Dr, Evatt, long’ a foe of the veto,
also has formally requested the UN
kecretary-general to place the ques-
tion on the agenda of the UN gen-
eral assembly meeting” beginning
‘Sept. 23. ;
Reliable sourecs in Russi quar-
ters said that the Soviet position on
the veto is firm, no matter how many
speeches are made on it in general
assembly debate or however it is
attacked. :
These sources emphasized that
Russia feels the unanimity of the big
powers is too important; that there
should be nothing to minimize the
importance of the’ United Nations
charter as it now stands.
MEAT FROM CANADA
Supply Sent This Year To Hunger
Zones Totals 59,154,799 Pounds
OTTAWA. — Figures released by
| the Canadian meat board show that
| in the week ending July 13, 2,469,384
pounds of canned meat were shipped
to’ UNRRA_ authorities for distribu-
tion in the hunger zones, Of this
consignment, 1,979,516 pounds were
consigned to Austria and the remain- -
ing 490,068 pounds to Italy.
This latest consignment brings to
a grand total of 59,154,799 pounds
the amount of canned meat. pur-
chased and shipped overseas by the
board since Jan. 1, 1946. The greater
part of the shipments .was destined
for the relief of famine countries un-
der UNRRA supervision, but during
the period France also received 5,-
| 000,148 pounds and Belgium 7,206,274
|-of the canned meat supplies,
._---
FINE CONTRIBUTION
MONTREAL,—Dr. A. Stewart Al-
Ten, who arrived in Montreal by plane
after four months in China where he
examined the’ administration of the
Canadian Chinese War Relief Fund
and established the fund committee
at Shanghai, termed the contribution
of $5,000,000 by the Canadian public
to Chinése relief as “magnificent”,
. GRANTED CREDIT
WASHINGTON.--The Netherlands
East Indies was granted_a United
States credit of $100,000,000 to pur-
chase United States army end navy
surplus property. ~ The agreement
provides for repayment in seven
years at an interest rate of 2% %.
‘ct laretiriaatatreang
a
Ps ee
THERE IS NO -FINER ONATED BEVERAGE
Pepsi-Cola" is the registered trade-mark in Ca oF Pepsi-Cola Company of Canada, Limited
| heen completed; —floors..painted, pews | respect to the “Town's proposal to
STANCO”
Livestock
oPRAY
Don’t let flies and insects bite into
Prout milk production and profits !
Protect your herd with economical,
easy-to-use Stanco Livestock Spray. It
repels flies, mosquitoes and other insect
pests. It’s not only a good repellent, :
but a long-lasting spray. It more than
pays for itself in extra milk earnings!
Ask your Imperial Oil Agent about
Stanco Livestock Spray in one-gallon
and five-gallon drums. Use it on your
cows and in the barns to protect your
milk production and profits!
PRODUCTS
ag oe
IMPERIAL OIL LIMITE
t _. Agents Everywhere in Canada
|the erib, Babies, it is pointed out,|department suggests should be as
until after September tth.
- lily have returned from a ten day | visiting relatives at the west coast. 12 945
-|week’s joliday with the former's for luncy, pn his way to Calgary. — )
| THB BLATRMORE GRAPHIC, FRIDAY,
AUGUST 2 1946,
WASHER REPAIRS
sat and ae Items
ANY MAKE
Vacuum Cleaners | " Ironers, Bte.
Frank Sylvester is holidaying at} Mr. Gus Howe has returned < a - Lethbridg e Appliances
Fela, oe OR oe ate trip tothe Pacific coast, 317 + 8th Street South « _ . Phone 4456
Mrs, Mike Cueck left yesterday wia| ,Mr. . aid Mrs, Jerry Benaan have _ MAYTAG SALES AND SERVICE Be:
TCA to join her ‘husband at Yellow-| left to’ take up residence in’ Calgary. Witseee Rolls to fit any Washer. Send your Washer bees to Us
knife, ”
There isa lot of difference between
Mrs. Angelo Orlando returned from| what: is good ‘and sound and what
a month’s vacation spent at Sathorn | warely sounds good.
and Victoria.
- Mrs. S..G. Bannan who was a pa-
Mrs. Floyd Hottle, of Calgary, is|tient at the local hospital, has re- :
spending a vacation at the home of| turned to her home, f
am tee i | ve le oe oce T's LOGICAL
Marie Youngberg, of Hillcrest, dhe? be what motivates men, not
spent last week visiting her _Bfand- just who manages them: fe
F ‘ o go to the bani
ac toial Merch Mth Pereny. , Born to Mr, and Mrs. Frank Petras i af
Blairmore Public Library will open|on Sunday, July 28, at Perry’s Ma-
Saturday evenings only, 6 to 8 p.m.,/ternity Home; twin boys,
Choose the Monthly Payment
Plan that sets you best
| Mrs. Tita Battel and family have} , When you ‘Yourepay | When you need a personal loan for
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Cox jr and fam-:; returned from .a vacation spent Pastey aint Geet Rietieh any reasonable purpose yout logical
y $25 .6months $4.25 course is to call at our nearest branch.
Making loans to individuals for as ©
little as $25 is part of our day-to-day
business, These loans can be repaid
$100 6months 16. by-monthly instalments and the cost is
j aren 50 6months 8.48
fishing Wp Le sco in - Mr.- John~Goss, of Vancotyer, is ’ gi
Miss Carlotta Fleming spent two spending a holiday in Blairmore, the
weeks vacationing at hér home here ' gus st of Mr. and Mrs. C. Minunzie.
ahet 4 téitaetna lok k } 12 /- .60 ‘| remarkably low, as the adjoining table
‘ “4 A ‘ ‘ : wi
and returned to jvegina 1asv week. KNOWLEDGE is knowing the|-* Bi 3 5 shows. Endorsers are not riecessarily
Mr. and Mrs.. Johnny Gresak anda’ facts. INSIGHT is sezing their cause.) - $200 6 months ; Seauired. *
ae ¢ - ‘ Ask for our Personal Loan
son, of~Bellevue, are spending a short; WISDOM is knowing what to do hosklet of Gary hon
vacation visiting’ friends and relatives’ about them.
in Lethbridge.
Mrs. Frank Edl and. son Donnie, «of ‘ THE ROYAL BANK
Born» to Mr. and: Mrs. Norman Frank, left today for a month’s vaca- OF CANADA
Anderson at Perry’s Maternity Home tion, visiting Mrs. Edl’s parents, Mr. nts Blairmore Branth -.M: G. Smith, Mer,
on Friday, July 26, a daughter,!and Mrs. Lutherland, in Calgary. . Bellevue Branch - - L. B, Long, Mer.
Margaret Evelyn. ' :
; Mr. John L. Lewis, head of the! 7 ¢ if ire a
Mr. and Mrs. Alex. McVey and United Mine Workers of America; 2S ENE he ORE I SE =
daughter, of Luscar, are spending a stopped at the Greenhill Grill today
You may never sell Gas —
to U,S. motorists
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. MeVey. Dr. and Mrs. R. K; Lillie and Miss
Kaye returned from a holiday’ that
by -her.*grand=niecs, little “Sandra took ane through the State © of
Bolderson, of Calgary, visited the) ashington and as far as the Okana-
former’s brother, Mr. George Salter, 5° ,
the first PAR of the week. Mr. and Mrs. R. Donaldson visited
Mrs. Donaldson’s pailents, Mr. and
Mrs. Gewar in Coleman this week.
|Bob is representative for the Mid-
West Pap2r Sales, Lethbridge.
Mrs. Walter “Smith, accompanied
bit.
CANADA’S. TOURIST BUSINESS
is YOUR business
Mrs. A. Gibeau, of Calgary, arrived
back from ‘Cranbrook after. spending
two weeks as the guest of Mr. ‘and
Mrs. G. A. Passmore, former Blair-
moreites. Mrs. L. W. McDorald and two]:
: .children, of Trail, stopped off for a
Mr. and Mrs, W. A. Irving, with brief ‘visit with Mrs. Lily McDonald
their daughter and a pal of. their son, enroute to Calgary. Miss Anne Me-
of Drumheller, -called yesterday son Donald, who has spent a holi day ‘a
relatives and friends in Bellevue and home here, returned: to Trail this
Blairmore, enroute . to Portlano, |
Oregon.
. Tourtst money spreads around. The
garage man, the grocer, the farmer—
everybody benefits directly or indi-
rectly. The tourist industry is profitable
business—worth protecting. Especially
this year when the impression American
- visitors take back with them will influ-”
ence Canada’s tourist industry through
all the years to come.
week.
“Notices to Taxpayers” were posted
The work of renovating the interior) this week to the effect that a vote
of the Blairmore United church has/ wil] be taken on August 14th next in
sanded’ and: varnished and all other raise $20,000 in Debentures, for the
woodwork varnished. The men of the} purpose of grading and hard-surfac-
congregation are to be congratulated} ing five’ miles of the town’s strets.
on their excellent workmanship. Poll will be open from 10 a mn. to 7
‘p.m. on that date.
CANADIAN TRAVEL BUREAU
Department of Trade & Commerce, Ottawa
Mrs. I. Bovio returned on Sunday y et
from a-month’s ‘visit with a prow Mrs. J. B. fuiee and Mrs. A. De-
in Salt Lake City. She was accompan-|coux were joint hostesses on Monday
ied by her grandson, Gary Krkosky afternoon and evening at ‘social. func-
and made the return journey via a tions in honor of their sister, Mrs. T.
Western Air Lines plane. Her daugh-|J. Murphy, of Victoria. Mrs. Murphy
ters, Mrs. V. Krkosky, of Blairmore,'and daughter Mary, returned home
and Mrs. J. Ruymaekers. and son! yesterday following a. week's visit].
Daryl, of Bellevue; accompanied by with her mother,:Mrs, W. W. Howe, and
Mrs. G. Martini and Sandra, of Blair-| other family cuales S. and thel their fam-
more, met them at. Lethbridge and ilies.
motored. heme. } We
3 “Memberehip in a parting dos ‘e's a
Home-makers, and particulgrly mark of good citizenship, according to
those responsible for preparation! of | officials of the department of national | {
family menus, are reminded by the de- | health and welfare, Ottawa. One senior
partment of national health and wWel-| official said: “A service club is just a
fare, Ottawa, of importance of care-| bunch of the best fellows banded-to-
fully-selected foods in insuring health,| gether for the good of the commun-
both mental and physical, and in main-|ity. Theirs’ is the spirit which gets
taining . morale. Literature on the,things done, and, as they strive for
healthful foods is available, on re-|better environment, they advancé,
quest, from the provincial health de- each one, to jappier and Doaltiier
partment. "living."
The interest on your bonds
adds to your income... .
keep. them earning for you
as long as you cab.-
a Your Bonds} —
7 a Suggestion bs the
‘THE BREWING INDUSTRY OF -ALBERTA
It is unsafe to leave an infant on a| Summer holiday time gives parents
high table, unprotected bed, or other|an ideal opportunity for having es-
unguarded high place, even for an;in-|sential medical and dental check-ups
stant, warns the department of nation-|of children, points out an announce-
al health and welfare, Ottawa. If|ment by the department of national
mothers must turn to something @lse| health and \welfare, Ottawa.' At this
for'a moment, after placing the child|season appointments may be made
in such 2 place, they are urgd to avoid with least inconvenience to all con-
home accidents by picking up ‘the cerned. This would, of course, be only
child, or placng the little one back in one of, the seasorial checks which the"
squirm so quickly, and may fall ita frequent as the family’ physic'an’ feels
mother allows her attention to be di-|it necessary, consistent with the age
verted even momentarily, —_, and condition of the child. , |